This week Ms. Barone, Ms. Newburger and I went to Mooresville with CMS to get an idea for how to best use our 1:1 Chromebooks when they arrive soon! Here are photos and takeaways that might be of use to classroom teachers from that trip and some webinars I attended:

Good teaching and planning is even more important in a 1:1 environment. This is a slide from the IB Middle Years Webinar. If you are a Piedmont teacher and would like to get better at writing unit planners and rich broad and deep essential questions, see Lisa Gurthie for the code to join and you can complete the webinars with you PLC for MyTalent licensure renewal credit.

Are you actively teaching these skills today? Slides like this are why I love IB - it is such a holistic and encompassing curriculum that never forgets the big pictures are NOT facts, but skills like these: "Approaches to Learning"

In a PLC rut and need to think better about working together to use each others strengths and minimize weaknesses? An ASCD webinar I attended shared this slide- 12 steps one teaching team follows in their PLC for each unit . For info on the IB steps unit planning see me for the code to the IB webinars .

As our wonderful advisory lessons teach, here is a slide for using t famous and effective SMART goal method. This slide shows how to use smart goals for unit planning but it is also great for personal use.

From the IB webinars: Are you teaching your students this? Our job is to help them know their learning strategies skills and how to improve on what is not working for them.

Hints for Running a 1:1 Classroom: Kahoot and More

In preparation for us becoming 1:1 very soon (!) Here are a few ideas and hints from the teachers in Mooresville, NC:

I can't tell you how much teachers and students of all ages love the free site Kahoot! Click the image to make your own account and try it. It was by far the single most recommended site of the trip. It is a classroom response system like Poll Everywhere or Socrative but it is super fun, requires no login and is gamified!

This is an image of a teacher's screen showing a graph of data of how many respondents got her question right and the girl's screen in the foreground shows her getting an answer right on Kahoot.

Students can write paperlessly via a whiteboard site. Sites like Padlet were also popular for sharing.

This teacher made little paper tents for each students job and stuck them on top as a great reminder during group time (see, computers can be social!) 1 job not pictured was "VOLUME CONTROL" Brilliant ! Engaged students are not quiet students so they need reminders!

Students doing test review via Kahoot.

A teacher showing Jake Standish how students keep their own spreadsheets to track pre and post-test scores so they can be responsible for their own growth. You can assign tests via Google Classroom and students will receive automatic notice of each grade. (Schoolnet will also autograde and will submit the grade straight to Powerschool- you don't have to enter a thing!)

One undervalued use of computers image search is for tracing! No need to be an artist when you've got google images and clip art! And sometimes a nice search is what gives you your own ideas and helps you make a great project!

A Few Social Takeaways:

I loved the "kind wall" in the cafeteria where students could leave positive notes and thank-yous for each other. It reminds me of the Positive Twitter accounts some schools are making

Who says middle school is too old for class pets? This little guy happily watches over a science room and he made my day.

I used to think having students make their own rules was disingenuous, but this teacher really had students live own and love their rules. She kept them up on an easel and students themselves changed to their rules as they walked in. Constant reminder and all were on board. Notice how beautiful the rules are, too. They ARE a "flamily" : )

Random Lesson Ideas to Steal:

Students wrote and then followed directions to try to re-create a pumpkin design.

One approach to teaching non-fiction. Have students read and digest the books then write their own - there are many ways to do this so see me for ideas.

The teacher who lead this webinar used a Shutterfly bookmaking app, She mentioned that this book was well-received by classmates and helped the student socially by allowing her to shine.

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Author

Lisa Gurthie is the PD facilitator at Piedmont IB Middle School. She specializes in tech and arts integration, interdisciplinary holistic education, and unschooling school to reconnect academia to real life. One day she will modernize her "about" page. She curates this blog for the professional development convenience of the teachers at Piedmont, but the editorial comments are her own.